The Texas Rangers traded Ian Kinsler and cash to the Detroit Tigers for Prince Fielder on Wednesday, a deal that appears on the surface to be a win-win situation for both teams.

Now, what about fantasy baseball owners? Let's take a look at the winners and losers:

WINNER: Prince Fielder
Sure, hitting behind Miguel Cabrera was a wonderful gig, and Fielder did his best in a pitcher-friendly park the last two seasons (.309, 31 HRs, 116 RBIs from 2012-13). Fielder has a small split at Rangers Ballpark (.265, 4 HRs, 15 RBIs in 59 at-bats), but it's still a better ballpark for a power hitter. Fielder has spent most of his career hitting behind Cabrera and Ryan Braun. Now, he's hitting behind Adrian Beltre. That's not a tremendous drop-off. Fielder remains a first-round pick.

WINNER: Ian Kinsler
Kinsler saw an increase in average in 2013, but it came at the expense of his power numbers. He's only been on the disabled list once the past three seasons. The Tigers are paying for a healthy Kinsler. If he does that, he's a nice leadoff hitter atop a loaded lineup. In Cabrera's six seasons with Detroit, the Tigers' leadoff hitters have put up a .271 average with 114 runs per season. The move to Detroit's offense outweighs the move out of Rangers Ballpark.

LOSER: Austin Jackson
Jackson likely loses that valuable piece of real estate as Detroit's leadoff hitter. He'll have less opportunities, which means he'll fall a few rounds in mixed leagues.

LOSER: Mitch Moreland
This is a maybe. Fielder has missed just one game the past five seasons, and the Rangers say he'll play first base. Moreland, who played 146 games at first base last season, still could log at-bats at designated hitter. Moreland will have to find time as an outfielder or DH or else will wind up as no more than a streaming option in daily leagues.

DRAW: Miguel Cabrera
Cabrera likely moves back to first base as a result of the trade, but it doesn't matter where he plays in the field. Cabrera remains the top pick in all fantasy formats.

WINNER: Nick Castellanos
Detroit's top prospect can move to his natural position at third base and could potentially win the job with a strong showing in spring training. He hit .276 with 18 HRs and 76 RBIs at Triple-A Toledo last season. Expect Castellanos to move up draft boards with his sleeper appeal.

WINNER: Jurrickson Profar
Likewise, Profar can move to second base for the Rangers. He hit just .234 last season and carries a "sleeper-gone-bad label" heading into 2014, but there's potential value here.